Designating Ethernet Port Type - Ruckus Wireless ZoneDirector 1100 User Manual

Smart wi-fi controllers that support up to 1000 aps
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Ethernet example:
CIRCUIT ID - ETH:'eth0':123:N/A:ZF7762-S:Coffee-Shop-
AP:04:4F:AA:34:96:50

Designating Ethernet Port Type

Ethernet ports are defined as one of the following port types:
"Trunk Ports"
"Access Ports"
"General Ports"
Trunk links are required to pass VLAN information between switches. Access ports provide
access to the network and can be configured as members of specific VLANs, thereby separating
the traffic on these ports from traffic on other VLANs. General Ports are user-defined ports that
can have any combination of up to 20 VLAN IDs assigned.
For most ZoneFlex APs, you can set which ports you want to be your Access, Trunk and General
Ports from the ZoneDirector Web interface, as long as at least one port on each AP is designated
as a Trunk Port.
By default, all ports are enabled as Trunk Ports with Untag VLAN set as 1 (except for ZoneFlex
7025, whose front ports are enabled as Access Ports by default). If configured as an Access Port,
all untagged ingress traffic is the configured Untag VLAN, and all egress traffic is untagged. If
configured as a Trunk Port, all untagged ingress traffic is the configured Untag VLAN (by default,
1), and all VLAN-tagged traffic on VLANs 1-4094 will be seen when present on the network.
The default Untag VLAN for each port is VLAN 1. Change the Untag VLAN to:
Segment all ingress traffic on this Access Port to a specific VLAN.
Redefine the Native VLAN on this Trunk Port to match your network configuration.
Trunk Ports
Trunking is a function that must be enabled on both sides of a link. If two switches are connected
together, for example, both switch ports must be configured as trunk ports.
The Trunk Port is a member of all the VLANs that exist on the AP/switch and carries traffic for
all those VLANs between switches.
Access Ports
All Access Ports are set to Untag VLAN 1 by default. This means that all Access Ports belong
to the native VLAN and are all part of a single broadcast domain. To remove ports from the
native VLAN and assign them to specific VLANs, select Access Port and enter any valid VLAN
ID in the VLAN ID field (valid VLAN IDs are 2-4094).
Managing Access Points
Working with Access Point Groups
163

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